.ck-riddle { min-height: 480px; } @media only screen and (min-width : 1224px) { .ck-riddle { min-height: 450px; } } In 1913, the Ladies’ Home Journal warned that what would cause children “to expect and demand too much, and (not) accommodate themselves to simple things”?Santa ClausKindergartenBirthday partiesBeing allowed to work on Ford’s assembly lineAn 1894 New York Times article claimed “there is not the slightest doubt that _____ leads to weakness of mind, general lunacy and homicidal mania”?“Bicycle riding”“The telephone”“Amphetamine chocolate”“Sugared cereals”A Pope once said, “This devil’s drink is so delicious, we should cheat the devil by baptizing it.” What drink was he talking about?CoffeeWhiskeyFour LokoHuman breast milkThe people of London ganged up on the first dude to start using what?ContractionsSuspendersAOLAn umbrellaIn 1878, a British Parliament Committee called what “good enough for our Transatlantic friends, but unworthy of the attention of practical or scientific men”?The telephoneThe light bulbThe typewriterThe internal combustion engineWhat did people fear would destroy motherly instincts in little girls, with one prominent pastor saying it “is going to be a factor in the race suicide problem”?Pregnant BarbieThe Teddy bearPink tool sets for womenFluoridated waterIn 1985, the New York Times wrote a veritable obituary for what business tool?LaptopsCar phonesAnswering machinesBeepersActress Mary Astor recalled that the prevailing opinion of her colleagues was “the noise would simply drive audiences from the theaters.” What noise was she talking about?Rock and roll musicPeople eating popcornPeople laughingAudible dialogueIn 1927, Atlanta Daily World referred to which traditionally feminine product as “dame fashion, whimsical and wayward as the wind”?Cupped brasAnkle socksNail polishFlavored lip balmIn 1902, the New York Times predicted what would meet an end “as complete and as disastrous as was that of the cycling boom”?Sliced breadToasted breadAir conditioningAutomobiles